Armée Malaisienne

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Re: Armée Malaisienne

Message par FULCRUM »

Ils ont mis trop de gadget dans leurs Su-30 notamment les Maws pour hélico de chez Denel ou ATE, par contre les aviateurs ont refusés le retrait des MiG-29N en 2015.

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Re: Armée Malaisienne

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LIMA 2017: CSIC discloses further details of Littoral Mission Ship proposal for Malaysia
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An official from China Shipbuilding & Offshore International Co (CSOC) has disclosed further details of the Littoral Mission Ship (LMS) configuration it is proposing for the Royal Malaysian Navy (RMN).

The company, which will be working with Malaysian shipbuilder Boustead Naval Shipyard (BNS) on the project, is also displaying a model of the LMS for the first time at the Langkawi International Maritime and Aerospace (LIMA) exhibition in Malaysia that runs from 21 to 25 March 2017.

According Pengfei Ren, a deputy general manager from the company's No 2 Military Product Department, the LMS will have an overall length of 68.8 m and displace about 680 tonnes at full load. The vessel will have a top speed of 22 kt, and a standard range of about 2,000 n miles at 15 kt.

The LMS can be armed with either a 20 mm or 30 mm naval gun in a remote-controlled weapon station (RWCS) turret as a primary weapon, and can accommodate two 12.7 mm machine gun positions on the deck area behind the vessel's bridge.

The platform can carry one 20 ft containerised mission module on deck in the aft section, and can deploy and recover two rigid hull inflatable boats (RHIBs) from launchers located at stern. This gives the ship the flexibility to be configured for a variety of missions including search-and-rescue, humanitarian assistance and disaster relief (HADR) and maritime surveillance operations.

Pengfei was however not able to give an estimate on the ship's complement, saying that this is still under discussions with the Malaysian government and BNS.

He has also declined to say if the platform's main weapon system will be sourced from China.
http://www.janes.com/article/68870/lima ... r-malaysia

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Re: Armée Malaisienne

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La Russie disposée à moderniser les MiG-29N malaisiens
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La Russie est prête à effectuer l’entretien et à moderniser le parc de chasseurs MiG-29N livrés à la Malaisie en 1994, a déclaré un responsable de la Compagnie aéronautique unifiée (OAK) lors du salon d’armement de Langkawi.

Un responsable de l'OAK a annoncé au premier ministre malaisien Najib Razak, qui s'est rendu sur le stand de la compagnie le jour de l'ouverture du salon d'armement de Langkwi, que la Russie était disposée à moderniser les MiG-29N jusqu'au standard MiG-29SM.

« Nous sommes prêts à procéder à l'entretien de ces avions (MiG malaisiens) et à les moderniser jusqu'au standard MiG29SM. Nous avons amené spécialement à ce salon un simulateur du MiG-29SM modernisé », a-t-il ajouté.
Le premier ministre malaisien a noté pour sa part que la Malaisie exploitait avec succès non seulement des MiG-29N, mais aussi des chasseurs Soukhoï Su-30MKM. Il a écouté attentivement les explications des représentants de l'OAK relatives aux chasseurs russes dernier cri MiG-35 et MiG-29K (navalisé).

En 1994, la Russie a livré à la Malaisie 18 chasseurs MiG-29N.
https://fr.sputniknews.com/russie/20170 ... -malaisie/

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Re: Armée Malaisienne

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Le Dassault Rafale seul en lice en Malaisie
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L'avion de combat Dassault Rafale est le seul désormais en lice pour répondre aux besoins de la force aérienne malaisienne, a indiqué le porte-parole du gouvernement français, Stéphane Le Foll, lors du compte-rendu du dernier conseil des ministres. "Les négociations sont engagées. Je crois qu'il n'y a plus que des négociations avec Dassault sur le Rafale", a-t-il déclaré, rapporte Reuters.

Et d'ajouter : "Il n'y a plus qu'une négociation bilatérale, il n'y a pas d'autre opérateur". Lors de la visite d'Etat du Président de la République Française, François Hollande, en Malaisie; le Premier ministre malaisien, Najib Razak, a indiqué qu'il avait discuté de la possibilité pour son pays d'acheter des Dassault Rafale, en précisant que le pays était encore indécis sur le sujet.

"Nous ne sommes pas encore prêts à prendre une décision, mais nous prenons bonne note de son succès dans d'autres pays", avait-il ajouté. La force aérienne malaisienne a exprimé un besoin pour 18 avions de combat. Un contrat d'une valeur potentielle de plus de 2 Md$ selon les estimations.
http://www.air-cosmos.com/le-dassault-r ... isie-92509

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Re: Armée Malaisienne

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Malaysia signs contract with China for four littoral mission ships
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Malaysia signed a contract on 21 April for the purchase of an initial four littoral mission ships (LMSs) from China for the Royal Malaysian Navy (RMN).

The agreement, which is part of a comprehensive strategic partnership between the two countries, was signed in Beijing by the China Shipbuilding Industry Corporation (CSIC) and Malaysia's Boustead Naval Shipyard (BNS) in a ceremony overseen by Chinese defence minister Chang Wanquan and his Malaysian counterpart, Hishammuddin Hussein.

Under the deal, the first two LMSs will be built by CSIC in China and delivered in 2019 and 2020, while the remaining two vessels will be built by BNS and delivered in 2021.

Malaysia's LMS programme is subsequently expected to expand, with BNS constructing up to 14 additional LMSs under licence to replace several classes of ship operated by the RMN as part of the service's '15-to-5 transformation programme'.

The RMN aims to increase the number of ships in service, while consolidating its fleet of 15 ship classes into five to reduce its dependence on single-mission vessels.

Under the '15 to 5' plan, the five remaining platform types - and the long-term aims for platform numbers - will be: three Multi-Role Support Ships (MRSSs), 12 Littoral Combat Ships (LCSs), 18 Littoral Mission Ships (LMSs), 18 Kedah-class (MEKO 100 RMN) guided-missile corvettes, and four diesel-electric submarines (SSKs).
http://www.janes.com/article/69813/mala ... sion-ships
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Re: Armée Malaisienne

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GBU-12 Paveway drop from Su-30 MKMs
https://youtu.be/i-V9Rnvis8Q
Un article parmi d'autres.
Malaysia adapts Russian-built jets to drop US-made bombs
By: Mike Yeo, June 15, 2017 (Photo Credit: Mike Yeo/Staff)
MELBOURNE, Australia — Malaysia has adapted its Russian-built Sukhoi Su-30 multi-role combat aircraft to drop U.S. laser-guided bombs, with a successful release of a live weapon at the end of last year.

A video by the Tentera Udara Diraja Malaysia, or Royal Malaysian Air Force, to celebrate its 59th anniversary showed a brief clip of a Su-30MKM dropping a 500-pound GBU-12 laser-guided bomb, with the accompanying caption stating that the event happened in November 2016 at the service's weapons range at Kota Belud in the state of Sabah, Malaysia.

The segment of the Su-30 dropping the GBU-12 has since been deleted from the video. ;)

It was unclear how the Air Force guided the weapon during the successful weapons release. Malaysia possesses the Thales Damocles surveillance and targeting pod for its Su-30MKMs, which it uses in conjunction with the Russian KAB-series of laser-guided bombs and Kh-29TE air-to-surface missile.

Alternatively, Malaysian special forces on the ground are able to designate targets using hand-held designators.

The country also acquired six Raytheon AN/ASQ-228 Advanced Targeting Forward-Looking Infrared pods in 2012 under a capability upgrade program for its eight Boeing F/A-18D Hornets.

Malaysia operates a fleet of 18 Su-30MKMs alongside its Hornets as the Air Force's primary combat aircraft. The service's Sukhois are fitted with a mixture of Russian and Western systems, while Malaysia’s Hornets have previously employed the GBU-12 successfully against armed militants from the southern Philippines who had taken over the town of Lahad Datu, Sabah, in 2013.
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Re: Armée Malaisienne

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ça c'est une armée qui ne rigole pas! Et le meilleur c'est qu'ils ont un centre de maintenance pour Flanker avec seulement 18 appareils!
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Re: Armée Malaisienne

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L'armée malaisienne commande 18 canons 105LG1 à Nexter


Le ministère malaisien de la Défense prévoit d'acquérir 18 unités de systèmes d'artillerie 105LG1 pour les forces armées lors d'une des plus grandes expositions de services de défense en Asie, DSA & NATSEC 2018.
Nexter_Systems_105_LG1_Mark_III_105mm_digital_light_towed_gun_at_DSA_2018_925_001.jpg
Le contrat devrait durer trois ans avec la première livraison de 6 unités en novembre 2019 et la livraison finale devrait avoir lieu en février 2020.

Le 105LG1 est un canon de 105mm conçu pour les forces d'intervention et de réaction rapide. D'une portée maximale de 17 km, il peut être remorqué par un véhicule léger, transporté par un hélicoptère moyen (type PUMA ou Bell 212) ou parachuté par un avion de transport tactique (type C130-Hercules). Cette extrême mobilité, grâce à son faible poids (1650 kg), lui permet d'être déployé sur tout théâtre d'opération aussi complexe que celui-ci (jungle, forêt, montagne, etc.). Un équipage de 5 hommes suffit pour le rendre opérationnel très rapidement (une batterie de 30 secondes) et pour tirer au rythme d'au moins 12 coups par minute.

Combat Prouvé et qualifié par l'armée française, le canon de 150LG1 équipe aujourd'hui six armées à travers le monde: Singapour, Thaïlande, Indonésie, Belgique, Canada et Colombie. Cette nouvelle acquisition de 105LG1 par l'armée malaisienne a confirmé l'excellente performance, la facilité d'utilisation et la robustesse de cette arme.

ADS, l'un des principaux acteurs de la défense malaisienne, et Nexter, le leader français de la défense terrestre, sont les partenaires commerciaux depuis 8 ans et ce contrat constitue l'un des principaux systèmes qui seront fournis à ADS. En appui à la notoriété de l'industrie d'artillerie locale, les 105 systèmes LG1 seront assemblés localement dans les installations d'assemblage ADS près de Gemas, Negeri Sembilan. ADS est confiant que cette initiative créera l'autonomie et améliorera les capacités d'artillerie dans l'armée. Le paquet comprendra également des munitions ERG3 à longue portée et Bacara Ballistic Computer.

Dato 'Shafii a exprimé ses remerciements au gouvernement malais pour l'opportunité de travailler ensemble et continuera à soutenir le gouvernement de la Malaisie en fournissant des solutions pour la défense.

Olivier Travert, Vice-Président et Directeur des Ventes de Nexter, a déclaré: «Ce contrat est une nouvelle reconnaissance de l'expertise du Groupe Nexter dans le domaine de l'artillerie et des munitions, un succès important dans notre stratégie de positionnement de notre groupe en tant qu'artillerie leader. partenaire en Asie. "
http://www.armyrecognition.com/dsa_2018 ... exter.html
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« Une page est tournée ; l'Algérie est d'abord fille de son histoire, qu'elle ait surmonté l'épreuve coloniale et même défié l'éclipse, atteste, s'il en était besoin, de cette volonté inextinguible de vivre sans laquelle les peuples sont menacés parfois de disparition.
L'ornière qui nous a contraints à croupir dans l'existence végétative des asphyxies mortelles nous imposa de nous replier sur nous-mêmes dans l'attente et la préparation d'un réveil et d'un sursaut qui ne pouvaient se faire, hélas ! que dans la souffrance et dans le sang. La France, elle-même, a connu de ces disgrâces et de ces résurrections. » Le président Houari Boumediene.

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Re: Armée Malaisienne

Message par malikos »

If Malaysia buys a new Gripen E, how much will be needed to keep their airspace with the existing F/A 18 Hornets, Hawks, and Flankers?
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2 Answers
Danial Shazly
Danial Shazly, Ex-Editor,Asian Defence & Diplomacy & 30 yrs of Jet Knowhow
Updated Apr 20, 2018 · Author has 617 answers and 2m answer views
Let me go straight to the point on your question. To be honest and in my personal opinion, the number of jets in the Royal Malaysian Air Force (RMAF) is not enough. The Gripen-E would basically meet the exact needs of the RMAF..What it would cover is the cost of operation which is related to the fuel and parts, the other is the skill sets. The Swedes designed their aircraft to be support by 6–7 ground crew which includes a crew chief and 5–6 conscripts. There is less required in terms of support equipment as the aircraft seats very low. The engine is a proven and reliable. It is a similar engine that currently powers the C/D Hornet models. You don't need a statement for big and powerful jet to say to your enemies. What you need is a smart strategy that could give your enemies headaches. A Gripen would give an enemy a lot of headache. A large number would give some serious thoughts to an enemy of how much they could get hurt.


The Gripen's small size eases maintenance, as many access panels are reachable from ground level. Source: Hush Kits: URL: Saab J 29 Tunnan and JAS 39 Gripen compared: Part 1, The barrel and the griffon

Lets look at another picture. If we are in a perfect world and Malaysia has no money and political will issues, then the JAS-39 GRIPEN-E would be one of the ideal jets Malaysia should have. In my view the jet is very capable and incorporate technologies and weapon systems which is on par with bigger jets! Furthermore its a lot cheaper to operate than many on the market today. The jet was design for ease of maintenance, something ideally suited to the Malaysian air force. I mean i would like to have a jet that is damn easy to maintain and use, and less of a stress for my ground crew. I would also need a jet that has a good turnaround time so that i can launch 3–5 sorties a day. Apart from that, i can armed my Gripen with high tech weapons that could attack and defend itself. It would be a jet the pilot would be confident in, when they go into battle.

The Gripen specification was very demanding in the multi-role requirement alone and the setting of a strict weight limit increased the challenge. All other things being equal (and they rarely are in aviation) aircraft cost is broadly proportional to weight; a shrinking defence budget dictated a firm price limit for the new fighter. Saab responded with its usual innovative approach, and bucked the trend of fighter weight increasing with each generation. Where the Viggen had an empty weight of around 23,100 lb (10,500 kg), the Gripen A tipped the scales at only 14,300 lb (6,500 kg), a reduction of 38%. This is actually extremely light for a modern combat aircraft. To put it in context, the Lockheed F-16A, which was specifically designed for the USAF’s Lightweight Fighter project of the early 1970s, weighed 16,234 lb (7,364 kg) empty, some 13% more. The fighter closest in weight and concept to the JAS 39 was the now defunct Northrop F-20 Tigershark. It had an empty weight of 15,060 lb (6,831 kg) and used a variant of the same engine used by the Gripen. Despite its high performance, the F-20 was not procured by any of the American forces and thereby lost in the export marketplace to the ubiquitous F-16. The JAS 39 is of a later generation than the Tigershark and is achieving impressive export success. Information source: Hush Kits: URL: Saab J 29 Tunnan and JAS 39 Gripen compared: Part 1, The barrel and the griffon


The GRIPEN-E would have been an ideal choice for many nations looking for a smaller and effective fighter that cost less to operate and easy to maintain. However it came with some catch as some of the items on the Gripen will require US approval. Source of the Picture: by Anders Lejczak, 3D Models for download / freebies

But in reality, this is not the case. The RMAF faces enough hurdles and the intervention of the Ministry of Defence in the selection bid as well as the intervention of politicians. Basically, they don't really get what they wanted in the first place. If the RMAF got their way, i don't think we have the jets that we are operating now.


The Gripen should be the most ideal solution for Malaysia. Skill set, and maintenance demand are critical to the air force operations. The nation needs to be smart in their strategy. Gripen and the other is the FA-50 would be the perfect choice for a Hi-Lo combat strength. Picture source: Pinterest: URL: Saab jas 39 gripen on Pinterest | Air force fighter jets, Fighter jet rides and Jets

What do Malaysia have now is 8 x F/A-18D Night Strike Hornets, about 15 BAE Hawk 100 an 200 and 18 x Su-30MKM Flankers. A total of 41 jets is currently on hand to defend a nation which is separate in 2 land mass with a distance of about 1000km. They certainly need more than 41. Even so the Royal Malaysia Air Force will need field the entire 41 jets given some will go into service or maintenance. So lets say 50% is on maintenance and servicing. Then your talking about 20 jets to protect the air space! Source: Wikipedia: URL: Royal Malaysian Air Force - Wikipedia


Hawk 200 light weight fighters. I was thrilled to hear when Malaysia ordered 28 Hawk 100 and 200. 18 units was for the single seat version. At the time, this Hawk 200 was featured in Air Force Monthly. I was thinking about them as little pocket fighters. Equipped with the same radar as on the early model F-16A so i imagine these jets could carry a powerful punch as they could be equipped with Sky Flash and Sparrow missiles. Until now i really love these jets. It would have been ashamed if Malaysia was to scrap them! Information Source of the Hawk 200 is: Wikipedia, URL: British Aerospace Hawk 200 - Wikipedia…Picture source: Malaysian Defence: http://www.malaysiandefence.com/...

To make it worthwhile and hurt the enemy badly even though we will lose, Malaysia will need at least 120–150 jet fighters to protect the country. That is the most minimal against an enemy who posses a much higher number of fighters. If Malaysia was facing an enemy that had 5 times the number of high quality fighter, then its probable to lose base on today’s numbers. Malaysia could deal a heavy blow to the enemy in my opinion so enemy defence planners will need to look at the reality of it. It is worth the risk will depend on what the enemy is after. Source: Opinion of Danial Shazly. This opinion is not related to others, but it is the opinion and views this author has expressed. The views here is not reflective of the views of Malaysia Defence Ministry and those of the Royal Malaysia Air Force or the Armed Forces of Malaysia.


Here, the F-5E in RMAF services sporting modern colour. The Tiger II could have been upgraded with BVR missiles and new radar, enhancing the jets lethality. Source: Key publishing: URL: Strange Air Forces: Royal Malaysian Air Force

Malaysia with its strange economic standings should focus on building its light weight fighter pool. They had a great jet fighter in the 80s, which was the Northrop F-5E Tiger II, a jet that is still in service among many nations who uses it as a frontline fighter. The F-5E was a great light fighter in its day when serving with the RMAF. So in my opinion, Malaysia should go back to that approach of using light fighters that could operated cheaply and is deadly in a multi range of missions that could surprise even the most sophisticated enemy.


The F-5E would have been an ideal jet if Malaysia kept them longer as the jet was low cost to operate and easy to maintain. It is an agile lightweight fighter, well suited for Malaysia. Malaysia operates the F-5E, F-5F and the RF-5E. Source:

Picture Source: TUDM RF-5E Tigereye - Royal Malaysian Air Force • Tentera Udara Diraja Malaysia (TUDM) - Gallery

In my own opinion and as frustrated as i am with the current state of the Royal Malaysian Air Force and those political nature of their planning, strategy and decision making, the RMAF and the Malaysian Government need to really buckle up. Like the entire Malaysian Armed Forces, the air force plays one of the most significant role in protecting the 30 million resident of Malaysia. What i might add is the puny 41 jets available to defend the entire nation and this could be a laughing stock to a potential enemy and a nod in the head as to the current state of affairs. Basically, lack of decision making and planning also emphasis the lack of decision making and planning in a potential war. There is no time to play budget game, middle man game and political game. The RMAF and the Government understands there is going to be great issues in the South China Sea in about 10 years once all the chess pieces are in place, the game is on…

If the RMAF have skill issues with regards to maintenance and the number of personal it needs, then in my personal opinion, the JAS-39 Gripen-E is a fool proof jet with such a low maintenance demand and requires a smaller team to maintain it. Don't kid yourself on the pretext of so called buying the Rafale and Typhoon when the air force have some serious problems of maintaining and managing a rugged machine like the MIG-29..The Rafale and Typhoon is equipped with the technologies that will take a entire maintenance team to learn in many years and even so, they will lose people to the private sector. The JAS Gripen is small but bloody lethal and solid built like the SAAB cars! A big fella can pick on a smaller kid but when they grab your balls and squeeze then your going to have a pretty tough day with pain!…

The Gripen is a jet to meet the similar purpose of Sweden. They want something that is easy to maintain, have quick turnaround time and be maintain with minimal skills within the team. They should have a solid support base as well as sufficient spare parts affordable enough to stack against a a superior force. That stacks of parts is enough to cover what could be an entire duration of fighting. A Gripen could be used as much as 2–5 sorties per day, enough to punch a nose on the enemy. Malaysia should seriously look at buying not 18….please not 18…at least for that size nation, possibly as much as 72 or even more, to be serious enough for an enemy to consider would it be worth the fight! Standardise would be sufficient for the maintenance and support teams to be more efficient and focus on supporting the jets in real time combat. Having 3 or 4 different jets is just shitty planning for the air force and also a big risk for a small nation. No matter how much the government puts on its table the power of diplomacy, when an enemy puts on table they want war…i sure hope by then Malaysia is able to defend herself until or if her allies comes to her rescue!…or else without the support of air power, losing an air battle would be the biggest and costliest mistake for a country who holds the record for having the largest Twin Tower in the world. Can anyone defend on that? Gripen should be viable enough!….

I say sorry in advance to my readers here for the words i use but such an air force like the RMAF and Malaysian defence needs to really buckle up…a good example the signing to upgrades the Fulcrum and then retire them straight away…Quick decision to make but lousy planning they have…I am sure the Russians are not happy about such a quick turn of events when it comes to the undecided and unknown thoughts and thinking of Malaysian Defence Planners!

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https://www.quora.com/If-Malaysia-buys- ... d-Flankers
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sadral
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Re: Armée Malaisienne

Message par sadral »

Défilé militaire en l'honneur du jour de l'indépendance de la Malaisie


« Une page est tournée ; l'Algérie est d'abord fille de son histoire, qu'elle ait surmonté l'épreuve coloniale et même défié l'éclipse, atteste, s'il en était besoin, de cette volonté inextinguible de vivre sans laquelle les peuples sont menacés parfois de disparition.
L'ornière qui nous a contraints à croupir dans l'existence végétative des asphyxies mortelles nous imposa de nous replier sur nous-mêmes dans l'attente et la préparation d'un réveil et d'un sursaut qui ne pouvaient se faire, hélas ! que dans la souffrance et dans le sang. La France, elle-même, a connu de ces disgrâces et de ces résurrections. » Le président Houari Boumediene.

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Re: Armée Malaisienne

Message par reinardt »

Bonjour, fulcrum n'arrete pas de nous dire que les flanker malay sont une référence mais depuis bcp d'article local et internationale et sur le forum pkdefense on en discute appartements c'est une catastrophe les avions ne volent meme pas et leur centre de maintenance c'est une connerie désolé pas trouvé d'autre mot.
https://airforcesmonthly.keypublishing. ... -flankers/
http://www.opex360.com/2018/09/19/malai ... es-russie/
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Re: Armée Malaisienne

Message par FULCRUM »

Et bien les Flanker malaisiens avaient les meilleures suites électroniques et de défenses actives de la séries MKI(detecteurs UV, HUD Holographique du Rafale, pods Damocles, bombes GBU....) mais ils avaient des soucis de maintenance au niveau local, car le problème ne vient pas de l'avion mais de ce qu'ils ont en fait, apparemment leur centre de maintenance n'est que du pipo en effet.

reinardt
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Re: Armée Malaisienne

Message par reinardt »

Bonjour fulcrum, je savais pas pour damocles, avec ça leur mkm est un bijoux ,ils les laisse dans cette état c'est un crime, au moin les notre sont plein opérationnel et j'espère pour longtemps.

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Re: Armée Malaisienne

Message par algerino1234 »

J'espère que dans quelques années les su-30 mka qui souffrent de quelques lacunes seront modernisés avec du matériel français.

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Re: Armée Malaisienne

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